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What Young Designers Dream Of

Bill Zheng of Chrysler with the Dodge Zeo, a sporty electric-drive concept car.Credit
Bridget Barrett for The New York Times

THE design studies known as concept cars, which are staples at auto shows and often inspirations for the cars of tomorrow, are also test beds for new ideas. The newest designers in an automaker’s studio often have a hand in these — with ideas that spring from creative young minds to become dream-car matter.

Who, at the moment, are the young designers worth watching, the young people who may become the next Ralph Gilles (creator of the Chrysler 300) or Franz von Holzhausen (who designed the Pontiac Solstice before moving to Mazda)? In conversations with senior designers, auto executives and design school faculty members, a few names came up over and over.

Here is a look at some up-and-comers who played significant roles in creating concept vehicles being displayed at major auto shows this year, including some that will be featured at the New York auto show, which opens to the public on Friday, March 21:

BILL ZHENG

CHRYSLER

Even when he lived a half a world away, Bill Zheng, 30, seemed destined to become a designer for Chrysler. Mr. Zheng said he had been a fan of Jeeps since he was a child in Shanghai. Then, in the 1990s, after his family moved to Michigan, he was impressed by the “dynamite” concept cars and production models coming from Chrysler’s studios.

And Chrysler designers were involved in the industrial design program at the Cleveland Institute of Art in Ohio, where, in addition to car design, Mr. Zheng got experience in furniture and product design. He was hired by Chrysler upon his graduation in 2000 and is now design manager for small, premium and family vehicles.

The Dodge Zeo, a design study for a sporty electric car, sprang from a studio competition. “Bill’s design hit it out of the park with the first sketch,” said Joe Dehner, vice president for small, premium and family vehicles. “It was a side view with the doors open and it blew me away proportionally. At the end of the day, big wheels and tires, a long wheelbase and short overhangs still look good.”

The end result was an electric car that defies expectations. Mr. Zheng contended that electric vehicles will yet become as common as those powered by gasoline or diesel fuel, and that they deserved to have different design personalities. “So to say that electric cars should look like electric cars is a dated thing,” he said.

He did, however, want a hint of an electric vehicle identity. So, the conventional grille was abandoned in favor of a version illuminated by blue L.E.D.’s.

“The Zeo is basically a muscle car, but it’s not powered by a V-8,” Mr. Zheng said. “It’s quiet, but it goes superfast. The image of a green car is kind of timid. I’m very environmentally conscious, but I love sports cars.”

JENNIFER HEWLETT

FORD MOTOR COMPANY

As part of an image overhaul for Lincoln, the brand imagined its latest concept car, the MKT, as an example of guilt-free luxury, a seeming contradiction in terms. Jennifer Hewlett, 28, a color and materials designer, was tapped to come up with an appropriate interior.

At the College for Creative Studies in Detroit, Ms. Hewlett studied industrial design, fine arts and furniture building, gaining experience in working with wood, metal, fiber, ceramics and glass, and particularly in learning about how to relate such materials to one another. “It’s one of the crucial points of a vehicle, all these materials coming together and harmonizing,” she said.

Her previous work included color and materials for the 2009 MKS.

“When the new MKS was coming out we thought it would be a really good match for her because of her taste level, her sense of style, as well as her skills,” said Susan Sage, the color and materials design manager at Ford.

It was because of the success of those vehicles that Ms. Hewlett was chosen to be part of the team that designed the 2007 MKR concept car and now the MKT, Ms. Sage said.

Ms. Hewlett said that with the MKT, her design inspiration was a feather. She tried to bring the lightness, translucence and layering of a feather to the colors in the passenger cabin, while using earth-friendly materials, like a rug made with banana fibers.

The stained oak veneers come from recycled oak, already found in some other Lincolns. The MKT’s leather is made using an organic tanning method, free of harsh chromium additives.

Ms. Hewlett said she liked using these organic materials and processes because, “It’s something that makes our customers feel good about the products they are buying.”

BERNARD LEE

MAZDA

Furai is Japanese for “sound of the wind.” Streamers, kite tails and a sheet in the wind are images that Bernard Lee, 32, imagined when designing the Furai (pronounced FOO-rye) concept.

“I chose wind because a racecar is all about downforce, and aerodynamics are very key to its function,” he said. “So I wanted to see how materials can be manipulated by the wind and get the visual interpretation of that force of nature.

“If you look on the body side of the car, there are these really waving lines, and it’s supposed to mimic the way a sheet in the wind moves. At the beginning, it’s very graceful, and then as you get to the tail end of the sheet it becomes very turbulent and it flutters.”

Franz von Holzhausen, design director for Mazda North America, said Mr. Lee’s model had “a really nice balance of proportion, of sense of movement, of controlled chaos and quietness.”

After graduating from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena in 1997, Mr. Lee spent three years at Honda and seven years at Ford. He joined Mazda a year ago and is a senior designer.

Though he had drawn cars since he was 5, Mr. Lee might have become a doctor like his father had his parents had their way. Instead, it was a sixth-grade teacher in Los Angeles, who had caught him drawing in class, who steered him on the road to design.

“I thought I was going to be in a lot of trouble,” he said. “But she took my drawing and said, ‘That’s pretty good.’ She told me her son was a car designer and that I could do this for a living. She showed me some of his drawings, and I was so blown away that someone could be so talented and draw cars for a living.

“Because of her,” he added, “I got to live out a childhood dream.”

GARY RAGLE

MITSUBISHI

It is as if Gary Ragle never had a choice but to be somehow involved with autos: he is the third generation in his family to work in the auto industry. His grandfather worked for British Leyland; his father for Ford.

Now Mr. Ragle, 29, is a senior designer for Mitsubushi Motors Research and Design of America in Cypress, Calif.

“I was always good at art and I always loved cars from Day 1,” he said. “My dad is a big hot-rod guy and some of my earliest memories were being crammed into the small front seat of a ‘34 Chevy coupe going to the hot-rod shows.”

But it wasn’t until Mr. Ragle attended the University of Cincinnati in his hometown and decided to go into industrial design that he found out people could make a living designing cars. When he graduated in 2002 he joined Mitsubishi.

Dave O’Connell, the studio’s chief designer, said: “Gary is very creative, innovative and very hard-working, and as an artist the guy does amazing art work. You look at the renderings that he does, even the loose sketches, and they really get you excited. And I’ve been a designer for 30 years.”

The assignment that became the Concept RA (which stands for “Road Alive”) was to design a vehicle that would showcase new technology, including a 4-cylinder turbodiesel engine and all-wheel drive.

His vision was selected after an internal design competition against about 30 others from Mitsubishi’s studios in Japan, Germany and California.

He said the Concept RA doesn’t look environmentally friendly, although the diesel was intended to provide good fuel economy and low emissions. “There are vehicles like the Prius out there that look environmentally friendly, but I think a sports car should look like a sports car,” he said.

MICHAEL THOMAS

GENERAL MOTORS

If someone says “automotive design,” what usually comes to mind is a vehicle’s exterior, not components like the steering wheel or radio. General Motors’ Michael Thomas, 30, admitted that he was no different.

“You don’t think of it that much, which is kind of ironic considering that’s what you interact with the most,” he said. Now, after working in component design — he is creative designer for G.M.’s Component Design Strategy Center — Mr. Thomas has a different perspective. He designed the steering wheel for the Cadillac CTS.

He attended the Cleveland Institute of Art and was initially interested in jewelry design, partly because of the influence of his parents, who were stained-glass artists.

Working at Ford, Bose and finally G.M., Mr. Thomas gained a growing understanding that parts of the interior can be a kind of jewelry that are important to a brand’s image and to an owner.

“For the CTS you really want to emphasize luxury and quality,” he said. “It becomes critical to iron out things like the fit and finish, craftsmanship and materials so that when the customer is handling it, it feels like luxury and it feels like quality.”

He likened the CTS wheel, with its leather and stitching, to a fine purse. “You say, ‘What makes the leather in a purse appear high-end, and how can we incorporate that into the design?’ ”

As a musician who plays professionally with his wife, he draws inspiration from instruments. “If you look at the details of a clarinet, something people have been using for centuries, that design has been so refined and executed so perfectly. That can be inspirational.”

MATT SPERLING

TOYOTA

The A-BAT, a four-wheel-drive hybrid pickup, is Toyota’s attempt to respond not just to compact trucks that are getting bigger and bigger, but to increasingly important environmental issues.

Matt Sperling, 28, of Toyota’s Calty design studio in Newport Beach, Calif., designed the A-BAT’s exterior. He said he could relate to those issues.

“I have a Tacoma myself and I love that thing to death, but sometimes it’s a little too big for me,” he said. “This was kind of my own personal response to that. If I could get my hands on this in real life I would use it every day.”

To make an environmental connection and link it to the Toyota hybrid family, Mr. Sperling gave the concept the trapezoidal silhouette of the Prius.

Mr. Sperling was hired in 2002 after studying at the College for Creative Studies, where his mother had enrolled him in a car-design course when he was a high school senior. Her reasoning: at school, he was always drawing cars instead of paying attention.

“It was the most brutal course I ever took,” he recalled, “but it got me introduced to the world of car design. I fell in love and that was it.”